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Australia rules out passport misuse in Israel spy case
Australia rules out passport misuse in Israel spy case
Australian Foreign Minister Bob Carr talks about the Zygier findings to journalists at a media conference in Sydney.Reuters/SydneyAustralia had no evidence that an emigrant to Israel who died in an Israeli jail in 2010, had been involved in the assassination of a Hamas leader in Dubai, Foreign Minister Bob Carr said yesterday. Carr said Ben Zygier had worked for the Israeli government when he was arrested, but stopped short of confirming he worked for the Mossad security service. He also said there was no evidence of misuse of any of the Australian passports taken out by Zygier, referred to as ‘Prisoner X’, legally issued to him under new names. However, Carr said the case raised unresolved questions about Australian passports held by dual citizens who work for a foreign government, and said Australia would lodge the strongest possible protest if it was found that Israel had used an Australian passport for spying. “We have our own sources. None of them have information at this time that one of his passports was misused. But we are very alive to the possibility,” Carr said as he released a Department of Foreign Affairs and Trade report into the case. “Certainly we would regard it as intolerable that any government would make use of Australian passports for intelligence-gathering purposes.” Zygier was arrested in February 2010 and charged with security offences that have not been made public. At around the same time, Australia had complained to the Israelis after its passports had been used in a mission to kill a Hamas leader in Dubai, which the emirate blamed on Mossad. On February 19 this year, Israel confirmed for the first time the affair concerned Zygier, who had earlier been named in an Australian Broadcasting Corporation (ABC) television report. One of Zygier’s lawyers later linked him to Mossad, the Israeli spy agency. An expose aired by Israel’s Channel Two television on Monday said that a senior Mossad official attended Zygier’s funeral in his hometown of Melbourne. Many other details of the case remain the subject of gag orders in Israel. A judicial inquiry in Israel found Zygier, 34, hanged himself in December 2010 with a sheet tied to the bars over a window in the bathroom of the heavily guarded cell where had been kept under alias and secluded from other prisoners. Carr ordered an investigation into the case last month, saying he would ask Israel’s government to explain how Zygier, a father of two who had lived in Israel for 10 years, managed to kill himself while tightly supervised. His death fuelled conspiracy theories in both countries. Carr said Israel had not responded to requests for information, nor explained the lack of a response. Australian officials and intelligence agencies still did not know why Zygier was jailed and what charges he faced, except that the charges carried a maximum penalty of up to 20 years in prison. Israel has said Zygier consented to his secret detention, to stem what it deemed as dangers to national interests from his exposure. That assertion has not been contested by his lawyers. “This was a security affair of the utmost gravity. The damage to national security that was liable to have been caused, and apparently was caused, was most grave,” Israeli prosecutor Raz Nizri told Israel’s Channel One television on Tuesday.